prescreen

prescreen

[-skrēn]

Etymology: L, prae + ME, scren

1v, to evaluate a person or a group of people to identify those who are at greater risk of development of a specific condition in order to select those who are in particular need of special diagnostic procedures or health care.

2n,

Usage notes: (informal)

a rapid, superficial examination of a person who does not appear to be acutely ill. It may include taking a medical history.

Clarity data provides increased visibility in all aspects of the customer life cycle, from origination, account management all the way through to collections and is especially powerful to make more informed decisions to improve the effectiveness of the entire instant prescreen process," said Tom Johnson, vice president of product development for Zoot Enterprises.

Through its proprietary patient panel of over 50 million patients, centralized advertising capabilities, and a fully hosted enrollment management technology platform, Acurian is able to identify, contact, prescreen, and refer patients into clinical trials, all while supporting investigator sites with services to maximize the randomization potential of every referred patient.

Growth in a Saturated Market: The Evolution of Prescreen" is a follow up to Zoot's previously released white paper, "Operational Excellence: The Prescreen Revolution", and further explores the advantages of instant prescreen for banks seeking to differentiate themselves from the competition, optimize a more intelligent prescreen process and grow in a saturated market.

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